Solution to Boeing 787 issues may take months

Earlier Cessna problems could provide some clues

The burnt blue casing that contained a total of 8 battery cells from the Japan Airlines Boeing 787 Dreamliner that caught fire at Logan International Airport in Boston on Jan. 7, rests on a cart at the National Transportation Safety Board laboratory in Washington, as investigators continue their investigation Thursday. (Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP)

By John Gillie, The News Tribune

Published: January 27, 2013, 4:16 PM

TACOMA — When a Cessna business jet equipped with lithium ion batteries caught fire in 2011 while it was hooked up to a ground power unit, Cessna and the Federal Aviation Administration moved swiftly to address the safety issues involved.

First the manufacturer advised owners of CJ4 aircraft to replace the lithium ion batteries in the plane with older technology nickel-cadmium or lead-acid batteries, and the FAA a few days later issued an airworthiness directive making those replacements mandatory.

Those jets were back in the air a few weeks later once the substitution was accomplished, albeit equipped with heavier, less capable batteries.

Could Cessna's reaction to its lithium battery problem provide Boeing a clue how to move forward?

First, the company says, it needs to find out what's going wrong.

The National Transportation Safety Board, Boeing, the FAA and Japanese government investigators say they're working ceaselessly to find out why the batteries failed. Fifty Dreamliners are not flying, and Boeing is delivering no more of the planes until the issue is solved. So far, there are no definitive answers.

The safety board said its first round of investigation found no evidence that the batteries in the Boston plane were overcharged, the most likely cause of the fire. Japanese investigators say they too have found no cause for believing the batteries in a Japan Air Lines plane that made an emergency landing there had lithium-ion batteries that were overcharged.

Initial dissection of the batteries shows there might have been a short circuit in one of the cells, but there is nothing definitive yet.

Reputation on the line

For Boeing and the airlines that bought the Dreamliner, finding answers quickly and restoring the Dreamliner's safety and reputation are urgent priorities. The average list price for a Dreamliner is about $200 million, but airlines likely pay less. The groundings mean billions of dollars in capital assets aren't earning their keep, and Boeing isn't bringing in dollars for completed but undeliverable planes.

Boeing is keeping mostly mum about just exactly where their investigation is leading, about what its alternatives might be and how long clearing up the mystery and fixing it might take.

Most experts say solving the issue is likely to take weeks and perhaps months more.

The investigation

Experts speculate the investigation is leading in several directions:

• Battery defects. Such high-power batteries are particularly sensitive to manufacturing flaws. Any foreign material could cause a short circuit inside the batteries, causing the batteries to overheat and leading the thermal overrun to spread to other cells. One cell in a battery involved in the Boston incident showed signs it might have short-circuited. The two planes involved in the two incidents were relatively new to commercial service.

The Japanese battery maker, GS Yuasa, says the batteries weren't defective. Investigators have toured the company's plant. They've made no pronouncements about whether the company's products pass muster.

• Charging system problems. Boeing and government investigators are talking with the Arizona company, Securaplane Technologies, about its charging system. Overcharging the batteries could cause a fire. Again, there's been no public verdict on whether the changing systems were working correctly, but the company has said it believes it is blameless.

• Monitoring and safety systems. The FAA allowed Cessna to pioneer the use of a different type of lithium-ion batteries in the CJ4 under a special set of conditions that required sophisticated control and monitoring systems for the batteries. Those elaborate safety systems were designed to prevent conditions that would upset the chemistry of the batteries and to isolate those batteries if they were failing. Special systems were designed to vent smoke and fumes should batteries catch fire. No fire suppression systems cover the lithium-ion batteries because putting out a fire in them is nearly impossible and they simply are allowed to burn out. When Boeing asked the FAA to use their lithium-ion batteries, the FAA crafted a set of special conditions similar to those it had imposed on Cessna.

The NTSB said last week that those safety systems in the 787 had failed to operate as planned. That failure presents another issue for Boeing, Once it corrects the issues that caused the fire, the company must then address the safety systems' defects.

Once Boeing and government investigators find and agree on the cause of the problems, then they'll have to create solutions.